CONTEMPORARY THEORIES OF PLAY. Theory Assumptions Limitations Similarities Differences Psychoanalytic Theory. Progression through a series of psychosexual stages. Children could use play as means of shedding negative emotions related to events they can’t control in their lives. Children’s involvement in play is means of gaining control over events that they cannot control in reality. Children use play to help master events that they find traumatic or stressful. Mastery
Premium Theory of cognitive development Jean Piaget Developmental psychology
Environmental versus Epigenetic Theories: When referring to epigenetic theory‚ it is a relatively new theory that focuses on the genetic origins and how they are affected by the interactions with the environment. Proponents of this theory believe that over time environmental forces will impact the expression of certain genes. On the other hand‚ the environmental theory removes the genetic factor. This theory believes that a child is a product of direct interaction with their environment. Proponents
Premium Jean Piaget Psychology Developmental psychology
Learning Theory by Jack Mezirow. This theory is the framework that I have in mind because the subjacent goal of teaching is to make autonomous thinkers ready to interact successfully in a social and working environment. However‚ following the latest research on teaching‚ to obtain these outcomes depends on three main factors (Woolfolk‚ 2006 p.510): 1. The teacher instructional support 2. The teacher emotional
Premium Educational psychology Education Theory of cognitive development
Chapter 2 Theories of Career Development Trait Oriented Theories • Measurement Movement in early part of the 20th century • Embedded in Parson’s (1909) vocational counseling paradigm of matching individual traits with requirements of occupations A. Trait and Factor Theory‚ Pages 22 - 23 • Frank Parson in 1909 maintained that vocational guidance is accomplished by 3 step procedures 1. Studying the individual 2. Surveying occupations 3. Using “true reasoning”
Premium Personality psychology Educational psychology Theory of cognitive development
Albert Bandura & Walter Mischel; Social Learning Theory Rebecca Campbell PSY 330 Theories of Personality Shannon Sellers June 3‚ 2011 Albert Bandura & Walter Mischel; Social Learning Theory While working on the Alaskan Highway‚ Bandura got to know the men he worked with. Most of these men had fled to Alaska in order to escape the creditors‚ alimony and probation officers. This is what gave him the incentive to major in psychology. Albert Bandura received his B.A. From the University
Premium Psychology Social learning theory Observational learning
Vgotsky’s Sociocultural Theory Lev Semenovich Vygotsky was born in 1896 in Tsarist‚ Russia to a middle class Jewish family. At that time there were very strict rules on where Jewish people could live‚ work‚ and how many people could be educated. Vygotsky was privately tutored in his younger years and was fortunate enough to be admitted into Moscow University through a Jewish lottery. His parents insisted that he apply for the Medical school but almost immediately upon starting at Moscow University
Premium Lev Vygotsky Theory of cognitive development Jean Piaget
your child cognitive development. Children are not only growing physically during the first years of life but also mentally. Every day while they interact with their environment‚ infants are developing cognitively (Oswalt). Much of what we know today about children cognitive development is based on the theories of Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget. Piaget developed a theory of childhood development which propose that children progress through a series of four critical stages of cognitive development
Premium Developmental psychology Jean Piaget Child development
development of children’s understanding‚ through observing them and talking and listening to them while they worked on exercises he set. His view of how children’s minds work and develop has been enormously influential‚ particularly in educational theory. His particular insight was the role of maturation in children’s increasing capacity to understand their world; they cannot undertake certain tasks until they are psychologically mature enough to do so. He proposed that children’s thinking does not
Premium Theory of cognitive development Jean Piaget Developmental psychology
2.3 Formative Assessment; The Questioning strand Bruner (1960) introduced the theory of ‘scaffolding’; in that children build upon information they have already mastered. In 1966 he stated there were three phases of learning: enactive‚ using concrete equipment to aid learning‚ iconic – using pictoral representations and symbolic using abstract representations and language. He suggested that the three phases were integrated not discrete stages. These phases are extremely apparent in the progression
Premium Education Learning Teacher
• Psychosexual (Sigmund Freud) Sigmund Freud (born 6 May 1856‚ died 23 September 1939) is an Austrian neurologist who became known as the founding father of psychoanalysis. When he was young‚ Sigmund Freud’s family moved from Frieberg‚ Moravia to Vienna where he would spend most of his life. His parents taught him at home after entering him in Spurling Gymnasium‚ where he was first in his class and graduated Summa cum Laude. After studying medicine at University of Vienna‚ Freud worked and gained
Premium Developmental psychology Sigmund Freud Jean Piaget